This P.E.I. casket-maker takes 'buy local' message to the grave - Action News
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This P.E.I. casket-maker takes 'buy local' message to the grave

Meet a P.E.I. casket-maker who's planning to make his own burial box: Andrew Campion says his casket will include beams of light and perhaps even sound.

Andrew Campion even plans to make his own burial box

'I'm not getting rich off it,' says Andrew Campion. 'It's more of a hobby than a money-maker.' (Pat Martel/CBC)

Lots of people while away hours hunched over woodworking projects in their backyard sheds, creating shelves, toys, even furniture if they're really good but you might be startled by what Andrew Campion is working on in hisLyndale, P.E.I., workshop.

There's one cloth-draped casket on a sawhorse, as well asan oak casketstill under construction.

Campion started making burial boxes as a hobby 10years ago after his friend,a local undertaker,told him one of the last casket-makers on the Island had retired.

"He asked me if I'd be interested in making them," Campion said. "So I bought some of the equipment that the fellowthat was retiring had, and starting making them."

'Don't want to get my hands dirty anymore'

Campion's love of working with wood began with a spur-of-the-moment decision 25 years ago.He was working as a mechanicand had been transferred to Ottawa.

This P.E.I. woodworker creates caskets for sale

5 years ago
Duration 0:56
Meet the P.E.I. woodworker who creates handmade wooden caskets.

"I was on my way up, and my hands were nice and clean. And I said 'I don't want to get my hands dirty anymore.'"

He stopped by a place that was making cabinets and asked if there were any jobs.The man in chargeasked him where he was from.

"And I said 'P.E.I.' and he said, 'you're hired.' That was my resume."

These days, Campion does seasonal maintenanceat the Charlottetown Yacht Club andsells about a dozen caskets a year to local funeral homes.

Each one takes three full days to make and costs him about $350 in materials, he said.He sells themfor $785.

'Not just a box'

"I make a little bit of profit on them I'm not getting rich off it," Campion said. "It's more of a hobby than a money-maker. If I was selling 200 a year, then I would be making money."

'I like these, because they're Island-made,' says Campion, who's very proud of his oak caskets. (Pat Martel/CBC)

Campion is quick to point out that his caskets are quite fancy.

"It's not just a box. There's a lot to it, just all the detail in it."

He hand-cuts dozens of pieces of wood that are glued and then stapled together.

Campion only makes one standard casket style and size twometres longby about half a metre wide (24by 80 inches).

"That way, my productions costs are lower because I don't have to buy different materials for different stuff."

Once the casket is almost finished, Campion takes bags of shredded newspaper and spreads it out on the bottom of the inside, making a fluffy bed.

'It's not just a box,' says Andrew Campion, who's quick to point out that his caskets are quite fancy. 'There's a lot to it. Just all the detail in it.' (Pat Martel/CBC)

"it's just to build up the casket so the body isn't sitting right down at the very bottom, and if they have to adjust the body somehow, they can move newspaper around to make him sit higher or lower.

"The flyers and The Guardian and The Graphic nothing's going to waste," Campion said.

Campion then covers the newspaper withclothand tops it with a satin sheet.

'They're Island-made'

Campion gently fluffs up the ruffled pillow. He does all the stitching himself, he explains.

Campion takes shredded newspaper and spreads it inside the casket. 'If they have to adjust the body, they can move newspaper around to make him sit higher or lower.' (Pat Martel/CBC)

"I had to pick up a special sewing machine from the States to do all this here stitching," he said.

Campion is proud of his oak casketsbecause they're Island-made. And,he believes wooden caskets are best for the environment.

"The wood part decomposes better in the ground. More environmentally-friendly," he said.

'Who's going to be in this one?'

When Campionworks on his caskets, he said he tries not to think about hishandiwork eventually holding someone's remains otherwise, he said, people in his line of workwouldn't be able to do the job.

Campion has been making caskets for more than a decade in his backyard workshop behind his home in Lyndale, P.E.I. (Pat Martel/CBC)

"They'd be upset every time they picked up the hammer or something, thinking 'Okay, who's going to be in this one?'"

"It's just a piece of furniture to me," he said.

While that may be true now,Campionsaid he knows his time will come.

Campion said he knows his time will come. "It doesn't bother me" he says. 'Death was never an issue with me. Our family was never brought up to feel bad about death.' (Pat Martel/CBC)

"It doesn't bother me" he said. "Death was never an issue with me. Our family was never brought up to feel bad about death."

After so many years of making caskets for others, Campionsaid he has an elaborate plan for his ownsomeday complete with beams of light shining out from beneath the lid.

"Like it's going up to Heaven, you see those lights."

Campion plans to one day make his own casket complete with beams of light shining out from beneath the lid. 'Like it's going up to Heaven, you see those lights.' (Pat Martel/CBC)

He also muses about putting a speaker inside the casket that will play music or his own voice to mourners.

"If I can figure out a way of getting people lined up and say 'Hey, how are ya?' I'm a little stiff right now.'"

'Not ready to die yet'

Despite his plans, and with life never a certainty, Campionhas yet to make his own casket.

Campion says his caskets are better for the environment than metal ones. 'The wood part decomposes better in the ground. More environmentally-friendly.' (Pat Martel/CBC)

"I'm not ready to die yet," he said. "I've got all kinds of time. My family all lived to 100 and plus, so I still have time."

But Campionbelieves that one day, he will rest in peace in one of his own finely-crafted creations.

"Everybody dies. It's something you can't avoid. Part of living is dying."

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